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Tetsuya Ohara, Patagonia

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"I attended the GRI report training course which was organized by ISOS group in San Diego. There we had an opportunity to use GENI's office where is located in a heart of downtown San Diego as a lecturing space.  GENI's staff served us with warm hospitality, and the facility with wide open space without poles created an open and collaborative environment for us to learn. A high-ceiled dome type conference room with 12 screen displays offered us very dynamic interactions among attendees and faculties.  Must visit".

Ed Rudberg, University of Minnesota

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Peter, the space was fantastic. The space felt to me like meeting space combined with the audio and visual amenities of a sports bar. The big screens and high top tables were so conducive to group work. It made eight hour meetings productive and equally as important, comfortable. Thanks again.

Nancy Mancilla, ISOS Group Co-Founder

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"We were fortunate to welcome people from across the country to GENI's office in downtown San Diego recently. The GRI Certified Sustainability Reporting course that we instruct was taken to a whole other level due to the utility that GENI utilizes to facilitate deeper interaction and collaborative learning. Besides the GENI team coordinating efforts seamlessly, they have also now set the standard for how we would like all our courses in the future to be administered."

CLIMATE CHANGE: How rivers will behave

The outlook for the Limpopo is dry
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PRETORIA, 14 November 2011 (IRIN) - Soaring temperatures and erratic rains brought on by a changing climate may radically alter water flows in the world’s major river basins, including the Limpopo in southern Africa, forcing people to give up farming in some areas, says a new study.

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UK urged to prevent vulture funds preying on world's poorest countries

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Greg Palast, Maggie O'Kane and Chavala Madlena
Vultures eat the eggs of sea turtles. Photograph: Yuri Cortez/AFP/Getty Images
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Campaigners demand Jersey legal loophole be closed as financiers seek $100m from the DRC

Britain is being urged to help close down a legal loophole that lets financiers known as "vulture funds" use courts in Jersey to claim hundreds of millions of pounds from the world's poorest countries.

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Urban planning failures putting lives at risk - expert

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alertnet // Katie Murray
A soldier plays amid water rolling past sandbags into the city near the military
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Failures of urban planning are putting lives, infrastructure and businesses at risk as weather shocks – like the floods now surging through Bangkok – become more frequent as a result of climate change, urban planning and climate experts say.

But focusing on improving building codes, land use regulation, public health and sanitation, and disaster response measures could help reduce risks, said David Dodman, leader of the cities and climate team at the London-based International Institute for Environment and Development, which works on sustainable development issues.

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UN: failure to reduce environmental risks will set back human development

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Damian Carrington
Children carry drinking water as they pass through a polluted pond in Allahabad,
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Droughts and rising sea levels could reverse efforts to improve living conditions of world's poorest people, report warns

Unchecked environmental destruction will halt – or even reverse – the huge improvements seen in the living conditions of the world's poorest people in recent decades, a major new UN report warned on Wednesday.

 

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Why the world is burning more coal

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Fred Pearce
A worker walks past freshly-mined, high quality coal awaiting transport on a tra
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The inconvenient truth is that coal remains a cheap and dirty fuel — and the idea of 'clean' coal remains a distant dream

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Q&A with U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon

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BRYAN WALSH
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It's the hard-working demographers of the U.N. who have counted the global population and have selected Oct. 31 as the date of the 7 billionth person. That makes sense because population is a major part of international development — and that's the business of the U.N. Bryan Walsh of TIME spoke with U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in his office in New York City about global population, the challenges of development and the lingering threat of climate change.

 

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Countries must plan for climate refugees - report

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Deborah Zabarenko
An internally displaced child sits in a mud oven outside his family tent at a ca
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WASHINGTON, Oct 27 (Reuters) - The world's governments and relief agencies need to plan now to resettle millions of people expected to be displaced by climate change, an international panel of experts said on Thursday.

Resettlement related to large infrastructure development projects has been occurring for decades, with some estimates of up to 10 million people a year, said the report's lead author, Alex de Sherbinin.

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